So, I deleted ~/.config/plasma-localerc which contained: bash-5.1$ cat plasma-localerc.sav [Formats] LANG=en_US.UTF-8 LC_MEASUREMENT=en_GB.UTF-8 LC_TIME=en_GB.UTF-8 useDetailed=true
[Translations] LANGUAGE=en_US:he A new plasma-localerc was (apparently) automatically generated somehow which now contains: bash-5.1$ cat plasma-localerc [Formats] LANG=C /etc/locale.conf contains: bash-5.1$ cat locale.conf LANG=C __________________________________ Things seem to be working as desired, but I was wondering if this is the best way to set things up so I get English interfaces, but I don't screw anything else (Hebrew support in applications, etc). On Sun, 16 Jan 2022 at 09:22, Aharon Schkolnik <aschkol...@gmail.com> wrote: > Hi. > > When I run commands like gnome-disks I get a Hebrew interface. > > I would prefer English. > > If I run LANG=C gnome-disks, I get the English interface I want. > > So, I edited /etc/locale.conf and put in the line LANG=C > > if I source /etc/locale.conf, I get my English interface. > > However when I login, I still get the Hebrew interface > > env gives me: > > $env|grep -i lang > LANGUAGE=en_US:he > LANG=en_US.UTF-8 > > How can I get LANG to be C when I login? > > I am running Fedora 35 > > TIA > > >
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